At 40 weeks pregnant, Bonnie Northsea was ready to meet her baby boy. So she learned a few moves and started dancing, hoping to induce labour.

She had no idea a video of her routine to Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” would go viral.

Northsea, 32, originally intended to share the video with just family and friends on Facebook.

“Someone told me Thriller would induce labor,” Northsea wrote on Facebook. “Here I am on my due date 40 weeks looking like a fool. I’m so awesome!”

"I had no idea this would happen," the Gainesville, Florida, mom toldTODAY.com of the viral success of her pregnant dancing. “It was just something funny that I did. I’m ready for the baby to come out, and somebody told me to exercise a little bit. I’ve always been a huge Michael Jackson fan!”

She toldTODAY.com that the video has been a pick-me-up for her family, as her husband is currently undergoing chemotherapy for testicular cancer and they’re struggling financially.

When Ashley McIntyre offered to donate her kidney to a stranger, she had no idea she’d end up spending the rest of her life with him.

But on Christmas, less than a year after the 26-year-old Kentucky woman donated her kidney to a 25-year-old dialysis patient named Danny Robinson, she agreed to marry him.

"I never in a million years imagined this would happen. … It was a whirlwind," a teary-eyed McIntyre told the Courier-Journal. “It’s crazy how it all worked. It was all planned out by God.”

McIntyre first learned of Robinson through her mom, who heard Robinson’s mother talk about his need for a kidney on a radio program last January.

Diagnosed with IgA nephropathy at the age of 16, Robinson was on dialysis three days a week, four hours a day, waiting for a transplant. None of him family members were a match, leaving him on the transplant waiting list for almost two years.

McIntyre was moved by his stories and wanted to help. She emailed the radio show producers and got in touch with

Instead of limiting your self portraits to outstretched-arm static images — selfie sticks help a little, but only for those in the market for Inspector Gadget-like arms — why not let a camera drone give that solo or group shot a little more height and drama?

All you need is a drone and a GoPro camera. It’s a little pricier than an iPhone, but worth it — if you value one-upping your buddies’ weekend selfies.

“I didn’t feel like there was anything I could do to help, which is one of the harder things,” said Dr. Chandler. “Journee’s mother has called the office a few times…she’s been very grateful, she’s posted it on social media.”

After a number of oil spills off Australia’s southeastern coast left penguins in danger, the Penguin Foundation launched its Knits for Nature program and asked volunteers to knit sweaters for penguins.

Oil separates and mats penguins’ feathers, letting cold water seep in and making them cold, distressed and less effective hunters. Sweaters help warm the birds — and prevent them from preening themselves and swallowing the oil — before they’re washed by wildlife rehabilitation workers.

One of the knitters to answer the call for penguin-friendly sweaters was 109-year-old Alfred “Alfie” Date, Australia’s oldest person.